Alabama State Highway 25
Alabama Highway 25 (or State Route 25) is a 257.3-mile long highway, running northwest from Alabama State Route 5 near Pine Hill in Wilcox County to the Georgia state line. North of Leeds, the route is an unsigned partner route to U. S. Highway 411 which continues through Rome, Georgia to Newport, Tennessee.
In west Alabama's Black Belt, the route is mainly north-south. It turns in a northeasterly direction near Greensboro, skirting the southern part of the Birmingham Metropolitan Area in Shelby County.
In 2023 the overpass at Alabama Highway 25's interchange with U.S. Highway 82 in Centreville was named the "Deputy Brad Johnson Memorial Bridge" in honor of Brad Johnson, who was shot to death during a pursuit of a stolen car the previous June.
An approximately 15 mile section north of Centreville is also called Montevallo Road.
The section of Highway 25 following the "Winding Stair Trail" over Double Oak Mountain north of Vandiver was constructed between 1914 and 1921 with the support of Buffalo Rock founder Sid Lee. The roadway provided access to his 3,000-acre camp in Calcis while also providing a route between the Coosa River valley and the Cahaba River valley.
That route paralleled a railroad line that tunnels through Double Oak Mountain.
Municipalities along Highway 25
From south to north:
Notable locations
- 6824: Montevallo Concrete / Heidelberg Materials
- 11025: Central State Bank of Calera, Calera
- Calera Downtown Historic District, Calera
- 11845: Sneaky Pete's, Calera (inside a Shell station)
- 21290: Bryant Bank, Columbiana
- Harpersville Garden of Memories, Harpersville
- Montevallo Industrial Park
- 4640: Sneaky Pete's, Montevallo
- Caritas of Birmingham, Sterrett
- 42860: Lallouise Florey McGraw Public Library, Vincent
- 53707: former location of 29 Dreams Motorcycle Resort, Vandiver
- 31972: Gaston Steam Plant, Wilsonville
- 37538: Hapersville Concrete / Heidelberg Materials
See also
References
- "Alabama State Route 25" (February 8, 2012) Wikipedia - accessed February 8, 2012
- Daniels, Malcomb (February 8, 2012). "Historcial marker honoring Buffalo Rock founder to be dedicated in Shelby County". Birmingham News